6
Delegation and
Negotiation
SYLVIE CLATTERED BACK DOWN THE STAIRS AND FOUND
ALEX TIDYING up the dinner dishes.
“So?” Alex said. “You talked to him?”
“He’s going to deal with the Odalys issue—”
“Yeah, not what I meant. Did you talk to him?”
“He’s fine,” Sylvie said. “I’m fine.”
“I can’t believe you sent him away. Unless . . .
what? Does he not do it for you anymore now that he’s all body
swapped? Got something against blonds?”
“Alex!” Sylvie said. “Would you just think before
you talk tonight? Wright’s dead. He was
flat broke when he died. He’s got a child, a wife who’s working
full-time to cover her student loans. Wright died, saving
Demalion.”
Her throat hurt, thinking about that close call;
she’d been slow, caught up in saving her sister, in fighting
Odalys. If it had been left to her, Demalion would have died.
Again. “We owe Wright. I can’t do anything to help them out.
Demalion thinks he can.”
Alex’s face shuttered; she winced. “Sorry. I didn’t
. . . I thought . . . He told me he was trying to get back into the
ISI. I thought maybe you’d dumped him for that—”
“I try not to make the same mistakes twice,” Sylvie
said. “I don’t like the ISI. I don’t trust them. But I trust
him.”
“Good,” Alex said, still quieter than was her usual
wont.
Sylvie sighed. “Look, I had to leave those women in
the’Glades at the mercy of their abductor. It makes me cranky. And
we’re going back tomorrow, and I still know nothing about him.
Except that he has a rep as the soul-devourer. It just doesn’t look
good.”
“You can take care of it,” Alex said. “This is your
world.”
And wasn’t that a lovely thought. That she belonged
to the Magicus Mundi. She shook it off, and
said, “All right, then. If he is a sorcerer, he’ll have a
reputation somewhere. Can you hit up the contact list and see if
anyone knows of a sorcerer with a penchant for killing
shape-shifters for his own gain? Link it up with alchemy. This guy,
if Wales is right, is old-fashioned.”
Alex reached for her computer, heading straight
into research mode. Sylvie put a hand on the screen, and said,
“Take it home with you.”
Alex met her gaze head-on. “You’re getting me out
of the line of fire.”
“It’s getting late,” Sylvie said. “Besides, you can
research from home just as easily, and we don’t get a lot of
drop-ins. Odalys hit me here once already, and now the bell is
dead. I don’t want you caught in the cross fire.”
Alex worried her lip, and said, “If I work from
home, you’ll keep in contact?”
“Promise,” Sylvie said. “Go home.”
“You’re not going to sit here all night and play
bait, are you? Demalion said I should watch out for you.”
“Demalion has problems of his own to worry about,”
Sylvie said. “Don’t encourage him to focus on mine.”
Alex shut the laptop down, pulled the cord, and
started packing up. “Sorcerer, alchemy, shape-shifting. Check. You
want me to look for more incidents like Cachita found? I mean, I
know we’ve been busy, but he can’t have been around here for that
long, or we’d have noticed. If we can track where he’s been, maybe
we can ID him. I mean, he might be Maudit.”
“Unlikely,” Sylvie said. “The Maudits are bastards, but they’re modern in their
habits. I can’t see them going back to alchemical scribblings, even
ones that work.” She poked at a peeling sticker of Chibi Cthulhu on
Alex’s laptop. “I don’t know, Alex. I got a bad feeling about this
one. It’s all so thin.”
“We’ll find him. There’s no way a monster sorcerer
goes completely unnoticed. We’ll find him, and you’ll shoot him.
End of problem.”
“I live in hope,” Sylvie said.
She saw Alex out, hit the phone again. Lio wasn’t
in the hospital any longer, which was a plus, but it also meant
that Lourdes could play gatekeeper a lot more efficiently. She hung
up on Sylvie before she’d gotten three words out.
Sylvie sighed, flipped through the images of the
women on her phone. They were all youngish, midtwenties. They were
all Hispanic. They looked like they would have been healthy if they
didn’t look so . . . dead. Made sense in a sorcerous sort of way:
If the sorcerer was using them as receptacles for an overabundance
of corrupted magical energy, healthy people would last
longer.
That they were all women,
all attractive women, implied that no
matter what the sorcerer’s magical use for them was, he was
indulging himself. He wasn’t desperate; he was picking and
choosing.
She really hoped Alex was right, and this one could
end with a single bullet. The Everglades could hide a dead sorcerer
just as well as the ocean could. She and her little dark voice
contemplated the idea with a shared hunger that lingered until a
car honked outside.
Sylvie flipped the phone closed, rose from the
couch, smelled swamp and dirt, and grimaced. So past time for this
day to be done.
Unfortunately, the world disagreed. She had just
closed and locked the door when she turned to find Salvador Ruben
coming up the sidewalk.

“SHADOWS!” HE SAID, HIS VOICE TIGHT WITH STRESS
AND NERVES. His suit coat, open, rumpled, flapped as he hurried
toward her. He tripped on the curb, stuttered in his question, but
didn’t stop. “Wh-what the hell is going on? You said she was . . .
You said the cops would call—”
Sylvie held up a finger—give me
a moment—unlocked the door, and hauled him back inside her
office. “Have a seat,” she said, busied herself with Alex’s
ridiculous coffee-maker. He subsided onto the couch, clutching his
knees. Anxious but obedient.
She wished the brew time were longer, wished that
it required more of her attention: She needed every moment she
could get to figure out what she was going to tell him. Maria was
alive. That was a plus. But she was close enough to death that
giving him hope might simply be cruel.
“Here,” she said, passing him a cup of coffee
heavily adulterated with sugar. Good for stress, sugar. He wrapped
his hands around it, brought it toward his chest as if the coffee
could ward off some internal chill.
“What’s happening?” he asked again. Pleaded.
Salvador Ruben was the kind of client she wanted to help most, the
ones who might break under the weight of the world without her. “I
called the cop you mentioned, but he’s ‘not available,’ and no one
knows anything about Maria. Is she dead or not?”
Sylvie sat next to him on the couch. She was bad at
offering comfort, but she could pretend. “Salvador. It’s
complicated and strange. I want you to listen to me. Just hear me
out.”
“Is she dead?” he asked. His mouth quivered like an
old man’s. He twisted the ring on his finger. He and Maria had been
married for eight years, been friends since they were twelve. More
than half his life was bound up in this woman, and she was . .
.
“She’s not dead, yet,” Sylvie said. “I’m going to
do my best to save her. But it involves getting her away from a
very dangerous situation. I thought the police could help. They
can’t. They nearly died, trying.”
“Aliens,” he said, his knee-jerk response to
anything extraordinary.
“No,” Sylvie said. “Sorcery.”
“What?” His breath gave out entirely. Sylvie fished
his inhaler out of his suit coat pocket, handed it to him, watched
him suck in air.
“She’s under a spell,” Sylvie said. “Like . . .
Sleeping Beauty. Only not so nice. The spell’s draining her.”
“So break it!”
“I’ve got a specialist working on it,” she said.
“We’re doing what we can. I hope we can save her. But, Salvador,
you have to understand, it may be too late.”
He turned away from her, put his face in his hands.
After a minute, he turned back, all his distress forced back.
“You’re . . . you’re telling me the truth. Magic’s real.”
She nodded, wondering if the man who believed in
little grey men could accept this in its place, wondering if he’d
go running directly to the cops. She doubted it. He hadn’t gotten
on too well with them in the first place.
“Is she . . . Is she hurting?” he asked. “You said
she’s sleeping?”
“She is.”
“Can I see her?”
“No,” Sylvie said. “It’s not that much like
Sleeping Beauty. You can’t kiss her awake. The spell’s fragile.
Disrupting it has killed one woman already.”
He nodded, a man used to taking the advice he paid
for. An easy client. “So what do I do?”
“Go home. Wait. Pray if you like.”
“We’re atheists,” he muttered.
“Good for you,” she said. “C’mon, Salvador. I’ll
walk you to your car.”
When he stood, he did it like an old man,
stoop-shouldered, curled around pain, staggering with it. She took
his arm and walked him out, biting back the urge to tell him it
would be all right. There was no guarantee it would.

HER APARTMENT COMPLEX, LIT AGAINST THE TWILIGHT,
GLIMMERED whitely; the pool gleamed blue, proving once again that
dim lighting was the best decorating technique of all. In the
uncertain light, the cracks in the stucco, the weeds in the
pavement, and the sheer bizarreness of the sculptural accents were
easy to overlook.
There was dim light, Sylvie thought, then there was
inadequate light. The stairs to her floor were deeply shadowed, the
fixture at the base of the stairs dark. She took the first step,
felt glass grate beneath her foot, and hesitated. Burned-out bulbs
were common around her complex. Broken ones . . . not so
much.
Her gun was back in her hand, held close and low to
her side—no point in scaring the shit out of her downstairs
neighbors if they looked out at the wrong moment. Or worse,
courting their questions. College students. So nosy when it was
least appropriate.
She took the stairs steadily, without much worry.
The stairs were a straight shot up, open on the sides, no room for
someone to lurk. A benefit to her apartment complex being built
more along the lines of a beachside hotel—a lot of open space. Not
a lot of nooks and crannies. Hell, it was one of the reasons she’d
chosen to live there in the first place.
The light near her door was out, too.
Overplayed, she thought.
Take out the first light, and it made her careful.
Take out a second light, and it stirred the atavistic sense to get
in, get safe, get out of the dark. . . . Or run headfirst into a
trap. Like an animal herded into a deadfall.
She slowed her steps further, approached her door
cautiously.
Trap, her little dark voice
agreed. The air was charged, the taste in the air sour and sharp, a
roil of nausea in her stomach. A quiver of out-of-place energy.
Another spell laid over another door.
She decided she was offended. The same trap? She might have fallen for it once, but
not again.
Still, recognizing a trap wasn’t the same as
disarming it. A witch’s spell had to be attached to something; if
she found the trigger, it’d be pretty much like cutting the
power.
Val Cassavetes liked cobwebs. Easy to overlook,
easy to leave behind. It was a classic, and probably what had
gotten Sylvie the day before.
Miami was full of spiders.
But it could also be a spill of sand or a scratched
pebble. She swept her gaze over the door, the frame. Cobwebs, dust,
clumps of mud. She wasn’t exactly house-proud, and it was coming
back to bite her.
She pulled off her Windbreaker, ran it around the
frame, cleared everything out of her path—there was a scatter of
sparks, a hiss like a snake slipping by. She swore, slapped at her
calf with her Windbreaker. Spell backlash—
The wood frame above her head splintered.
Sylvie whirled, tried to drop the Windbreaker from
around her fist, tried to get her gun back up.
The gunman was closer than she thought he’d be,
coming out of her next-door neighbor’s apartment. She slammed her
door open, slammed it tight, latched it, gun in hand, breathed
hard.
It wouldn’t hold. Not long enough for the police
anyway.
Illusion spell plus bullets, she thought. Who said
the bad guys couldn’t learn?
A back window might give her an escape route—if she
didn’t break her leg on the landing.
The door burst open, right off the hinges, a rocket
of wood that slammed into her shoulder, spun her gun out of her
hand. He loomed in the doorway, looking as surprised as she felt
about the broken door. Cheap material, or spell taint—she didn’t
know. Didn’t have time to care.
She lunged forward, not for her gun, but for his
knees. If he fell just right, she’d have him out of her apartment
and even better—over the railing.
He grunted as she tackled him, snarled a hand in
her hair, trying for balance, only succeeded in falling forward,
the opposite direction she wanted. His weight crashed down on her,
the heat and sweat and fear-stink of him. Sylvie squirmed beneath
him, her goal crystal clear—
Get his gun.
She wasn’t a trained fighter, but she was strong,
determined, and fought dirty. In the distance, she could hear her
neighbor screaming. She got his gun hand beneath her body, cringing
and praying that his finger had slipped from the trigger. He
punched, aiming for her kidneys, hitting her hip, and she gouged
hard at the nerves in his forearm.
He rolled, trying to expose her belly, to get his
hand free, and she dug her nails in and raked, felt skin gum up the
space beneath her nails . . . The gun wobbled in his grip; his
breath went out in a hiss. She got the gun free, jerking it from
his loosening grasp with a crack that she thought might be his
finger.
They sprang apart. Sylvie twitched the gun into a
proper grip. He canted a glance at the destroyed door, at her gun a
few feet away from him; he looked like he was about to make a
judgment call. Could he finish the job before the police
arrived?
Sylvie made a judgment call of her own.
She pulled the trigger. He crashed backward—finally
out of her apartment. She followed him, gun ready. If he wasn’t
down, she’d have no problem shooting him again.
Dark blood bubbled through his T-shirt. Not
arterial, but not insignificant. His eyes were closed, his features
drawn tight with pain and shock, aging him.
Now that she had a chance to assess instead of
react, she thought he was of the same ilk that had attacked Wales:
youngish, dressed to blend in, but without even a protective charm
to his name. Guess that might have broken the illusion if she’d
been trapped in it.
Her downstairs neighbor, a college student named
Javier, staggered up the stairs. Beer night with his buds, she
thought. And yeah, there was the milling of footsteps beneath,
young men who weren’t sure they wanted to get involved beyond
calling 911.
He gaped at her. “You all right? He all right?” He
didn’t wait for an answer but looked down at the gunman. “Should we
try to stop the bleeding or something?”
“If you want,” Sylvie said. “He attacked me. I’m
not feeling forgiving enough to play paramedic.”
Javier dithered, and she said, “Why don’t you check
on Christina? He came out of her apartment.” She jerked her chin in
that direction, and he obeyed. Shocked but willing. A good
kid.
Sylvie crouched down beside the gunman. “Who sent
you?”
He groaned, turned his head, his breathing labored
and thick.
“Confession’s good for the soul,” she said. “Think
about it. You wake up in the hospital, talk to the cops. Of course,
if you talk to me, your odds of reaching the hospital alive go up.”
She tapped the gun muzzle against his shoulder; his eyes
widened.
“I don’t—”
Sylvie said, “I’m not playing. And you didn’t know
what you were getting into. I’ve killed worse than you and gone to
sleep with a smile—”
“Odalys,” he said. “I used to smuggle things into
the country for her. She asked me to do this.”
“Good,” she said. “Just remember to tell that to
the cops when they ask.”
She dropped the gun when the police lights flashed
into the lot and resigned herself to another couple of hours before
she got that shower she wanted.

MIDNIGHT HAD COME AND GONE BEFORE SHE WAS DONE
ANSWERING the police questions. Judicious use of Adelio Suarez’s
name, and the clear evidence against the gunman—a shattered door,
the traumatized neighbor who’d unwillingly hosted the bastard until
Sylvie got home—meant Sylvie got to answer questions in the dubious
comfort of her own apartment.
She gave the police a list of every possible place
she could be reached in the near future and waved them goodbye. Ten
minutes after that, she helped apartment maintenance nail plywood
sheets over the gaping hole in the door and headed back out into
the night.
Alex would open her doors to Sylvie; but then, the
options were sharing her couch with the German shepherd who drooled
or the futon with Alex, who kicked and twitched, as active in her
sleep as she was during the day.
She called Wales. “Tell me you snuck into a hotel
room with two beds.”
He groaned protest but gave her the address and
room number.
Thirty minutes later, she was pulling into one of
the Holiday Inn Expresses that dotted the Florida landscape.
Tapping on his door yielded a grumble and a series of oddly careful
footsteps.
He opened the door, leaned across it, blocking her
entrance, and said, “I could have been sleeping, y’know.”
“What kind of necromancer sleeps at night? Isn’t
that against union rules or something?” she asked. She squeezed in,
blinked in the dimness, took in the scent of old tallow and spices.
Not the usual hotel scent. Wales had been playing with the occult
in the dark like the good, creepy Ghoul he was. “Tell me the room
has a coffeepot.”
“Yeah.”
She lingered in the little square space beyond the
door, trying to figure if she really wanted Wales for a roommate.
Even for a night. If it had been a suite, maybe. “You know, if
you’re going to sneak into a hotel, why not pick something
nicer?”
“Reservations,” he said. “Theirs, not mine. I took
this room out of the system, but at an expensive hotel, someone
would throw a stink. More odds of discovery.”
“Surprisingly sensible,” she said. “Do you still
have clean towels?”
He flipped on the light, looking at her. “D’you
have a black eye?”
She touched her face; it wasn’t particularly
tender. “Just dirt, I think. Bruised ribs, shoulder, and hip,
though. Odalys sent one of her bullyboys to my home. Kicked my door
in.”
“You shoot him, too?” Wales grinned.
“Yeah.”
He stopped smiling. “Seriously? I thought your rep
was all about shooting monsters. Not people. That’s two in one day,
Sylvie.”
“I’ve learned to make exceptions,” she said. Sylvie
ducked under his arm and trespassed. She stopped two steps later
and looked at the room. Basic layout—two beds, dresser, TV, a
table, and two chairs—except Wales had spent some time rearranging.
The chairs were piled on the dresser, a tangle of legs, and the
table was squished into the narrow space between the second bed and
the wall, clearing a space near the window.
He’d also let the Hands out of their box. He’d made
a circle of them, palms up, and stippled them with some pungent
herbal ash that made Sylvie’s nose wrinkle and her lungs itch as
she approached.
“Pennyroyal,” he said. “Helps ward off curses. Be a
hell of a thing if I went to all that trouble to get Jennifer back
here, and it killed me.”
“I thought you were going to talk to her, not drag
her back. Just talk.”
Wales shifted, antsy under his skin. “I wish. If I
were wanting to know about her past, what her favorite color was,
her best memory—I’d just ask. But death’s traumatic as hell no
matter how it happens. We don’t like to have our toys taken from
us, and life’s about the biggest toy there is.”
“And trauma leads to muddled thinking,” Sylvie
interrupted.
“Especially when what you’re wanting to ask about
is their death. Then it’s all metaphor and scrambled words. Like
talking to someone who got their Happy Meal with a side order of
LSD. If I want to learn anything from her death, she’s gotta come
back. And that requires more than a bit of thought.”
“Plus backup, or are you just using the Hands as
ashtrays?”
Wales snorted. “Martha Stewart would have my hide.
Nah, they’re going to be a fence of sorts. Hem her in. In case she
tries to escape.”
Sylvie edged past the piled-up furniture, crawled
onto one of the beds. Necromancy. A lovely way to victimize the
dead. But they needed more to go on. As if he had had this same
argument with himself, Wales said, “If she could understand what
was at stake, she’d want to help us. Save
the other women.”
“That’s sweet,” Sylvie said. “But I’ve always found
that human nature involves a lot of ‘Fuck you, I’ve got mine.’
”
Wales cracked a thin smile. “Truth. Are you gonna
hang around for this shindig?”
“Nowhere else to go,” Sylvie said. The bed was
comfortable beneath her. She might have won her battle with her
attacker, been checked over by the EMTs and pronounced okay, but
her side ached, her hands ached, and she thought there might still
be splinters in her hair from the bullet hitting the door frame.
Here was good. Even if it meant playing witness to coercive
magic.
Plus, this way she could keep an eye on Wales. He
might be more competent than he had pretended to be on their first
meeting, but dealing with ghosts just made her skin crawl.
Dead things should stay that
way, her dark voice commented.
Demalion, Sylvie rebutted.
The dark voice sulked and slunk away.
Wales took a breath, flipped out his lighter, and
Sylvie coughed. “Smoke detector?”
He clambered up with a shame-faced wince and yanked
the wires. “Thanks.”
“Had enough excitement for tonight,” Sylvie said.
“Hate to add hotel evac to the list.” She dragged a pillow to her
chest, curled around it; the bruising ribs on her side appreciated
the support. She felt like a tween on a sleepover—all they needed
was a Ouija board and some Gummi Bears to replicate her
seventh-grade birthday party—and patted her gun for moral
support.
Wales lit a small brazier of herbs; they didn’t
stink as strongly as the pennyroyal did, but they made a strange
smoky trail that coiled not-quite-aimlessly through the circle of
Hands. Where the smoke brushed up against the Hands, ghosts
shimmered in grim outlines.
Yeah, this was going to be ugly. Drag a dead girl’s
soul back through the ether, interrogate her, study her, and slap
her in the center of a hard-eyed ghost ring of murdered
ex-cons.
Wales tossed a piece of jewelry into the brazier;
it sank under herbs so fast that Sylvie only had time to register
the gold shine of it. It looked like a pendant charm.
He rattled off a long stream of words that could
have been anything, a quick blur of vowels barely contained by a
consonant here and there. Alex would have been making
zombie-language references—all groan and moan and tongueless words.
Whatever it was, it raised the fine hairs on Sylvie’s arms, made
her clutch the pillow tighter.
Not fear, she told herself.
Discomfort. It didn’t sound like something
people should say.
The smoke reacted to it, eddying back from the
edges of the magical ghost circle, twining up Wales’s legs,
creeping through the air like a snake tracking a rat’s scent.
“Jennifer Costas,” Wales said. Back to English, and
it should have been a relief. But the Texas drawl was gone from his
voice; he sounded crisp and hard and clean. It was a tone a stage
actor would envy, meant for carrying cleanly to the rearmost seats.
It was a sound to wake the dead.
“Jennifer,” Wales said again.
The smoke thickened, bunched like a swallowing
snake, pulling at something Sylvie couldn’t see.
Belatedly, she wondered if she’d see anything at
all, or if she’d be stuck watching Wales talk to more invisible
people, trying to read success or failure in his body
language.
Fire crackled in the smoke, a sullen flicker like a
banked fire being poked. Sylvie thought of Jennifer Costas, burned
up in a spell backlash, and found herself whispering the closest
thing to a prayer she was capable of. Please,
let her not spend the afterlife eternally burning.
It depended, she supposed, on whichever god had
laid claim to her soul. Some were more merciful than others. Some
were indifferent. And some were downright cruel.
The smoke closed in, engulfed the flame, giving
shape to the intangible. Jennifer Costas was formed out of smoke
and distant fires, her long hair like fiber optics, glowing dully
at the ends, drifting.
Why?
Her voice was a wisp, a child’s plaint.
Sylvie smothered guilt. Sooner
done, sooner she’ll be released. For once, she and her inner
voice agreed.
Wales swallowed, let the hard edge leave his tone.
“Jennifer,” he said.
The ghost girl turned her head, and Sylvie decided
she preferred the smudgy shimmer the girl had been in the’Glades to
this phantasm, whose eyes gleamed with lambent flames. Jennifer
shouldn’t have been threatening—lost, scared, dead—but panic lent
strength to any creature.
Sylvie shifted on the bed, running over anything
she knew on how to banish a ghost. Just in case.
Jennifer shuddered in response to one of Wales’s
questions. Like a child, she repeated it, Was I
first? No. She and she were there. White eyes under the water, and
he pressed me down under the water, a knife blade in my skin,
crimson rivers flowing. . . . He gave us to him like a poisoned
sweet, and he lodged in our bones. In our blood. We burn.
The fire crackle beneath her smoke skin doused
itself, faded into silence. An utter silence. Utter stillness.
Death in a smoke shell. A hollow core of memory and pain.
Sylvie shivered. She almost wished the flames were
back.
“Do you remember the words he used?” Wales asked.
“Can you tell me?”
Wales was dogged; Sylvie gave him that. Still
concentrating on the spell that bound the rest of the women. Trying
to figure out a way to safely unpick the knot they were in. Still
trying to make sense of someone else’s malignancy. But his
shoulders were tight, his eyes jittery, and she wondered how long
he could hold Jennifer there.
Chains. More chains.
Jennifer mourned, turning about in the circle. Trapped. I want to go home. I must. He calls.
Beneath the stillness, a tension. Sylvie thought of
tides pulling back before tsunamis, of the silence before an
earthquake.
“Wales,” she murmured. “Hurry it up.” Dangerous to
interrupt, to divert his attention, but she couldn’t help but feel
that time was short. A new sound grew beneath the smoke, something
distant, repetitive, vaguely familiar. Something that made her
edgy.
“What was his purpose?” Wales said.
The smoke shape turned her palms upward, wordless
answer or a confused shrug. The sigils carved into her palms meant
the motion could be either.
To hide. To grow strong at our
expense. At his. He calls.
Sylvie peered through the haze of ghosts playing
fence, tried to see what Wales might be seeing. All it was to her
was featureless grey-black, a roil of distress.
“Hide from whom?”
Jennifer flashed in the circle, a rush of smoky
movement, crashing up against the hedging ghosts, trying to escape.
Her face, built of smoke and terror, was visible through the gaps;
her lips moved soundlessly. The word was clear, though.
No. No. No. I don’t want to. .
. .
Wales frowned, his face tight and stern. “Tell me,”
he commanded. The ghost wept flaming tears.
Sylvie wondered if Alex would still find him sweet
now. She didn’t dwell on it. That sound came again, just on the
edge of her hearing. A displacement of expelled air. An explosive
sigh, but with anger beneath. The bed shivered beneath her. She
dropped the pillow, held her hands out before her. Steady as a
rock. The trembling wasn’t her. It was something else. Something
approaching. Something sniffing them out. Sniffing the ghost
out.
A power filter, Wales had said. Power went in,
changed, came out again. That kind of thing left a mark on a soul.
That kind of thing could make a ghost a tasty morsel for anything
powerful enough to sense it.
Another thought crossed her mind, sent her heart
into rocketing overdrive. He gave us to
him.
It wouldn’t be the first time a sorcerer had
bartered with a god for power. If the soul-devourer had given these
women’s souls to a god . . . if Wales was keeping Jennifer here
when a god was expecting her.
He calls.
“Wales!” Sylvie snapped. “Send her back. Do it
now.”
“Just a minute more,” he crooned, equal answer to
Sylvie and comfort to the ghost. “Just a moment, now.” He circled
the ghost, scribing a circle within the ghost circle, and Sylvie’s
nerves seized with a sudden realization.
Wales was inside the ghost circle. Contained as
much as the ghost he summoned.
Too late, Jennifer
whispered. He comes.
Sylvie rose, paced the outside of the circle in an
echo of Wales pacing the inside. The cold barrier of the Hands kept
her at bay.
Leave him, her dark voice
suggested. Run.
The air hummed, seethed in the room like locusts,
something fiercely alive, something terrifyingly hungry.
The entire room trembled around them, a localized
earthquake. In the hall, people were beginning to cry out, a
hastening of footsteps running for the exits.
And the explosive grunting cough was getting
stronger.
God, Sylvie thought. A god, coming to see what was
keeping his newly gifted soul.
“Wales!” she shouted. “End the spell!”
Wales’s head came up, only then catching on to his
danger. His expression went blank with shock; Jennifer’s burning
gaze was tilted upward, terrified, waiting, a huddled creature in
the glare of a headlight.
Sylvie gritted her teeth, sucked in willpower,
hoped there were enough remnants of Wales’s protective spell on her
skin, and reached through the ghost barrier.
Ice and cold and vertigo; her arm went dead to the
shoulder, but her hand hit what she was aiming for, closed tightly
around Wales’s thin forearm. She leaned back and yanked.
He barreled out of the circle, shouting protest;
Sylvie only yanked harder, pulled them both down between the beds.
Light exploded into the room after him—the spell breaking on two
fronts.
The room shuddered; Sylvie scrabbled for her gun,
got Wales between her and the floor, and stared into the heart of
the light, trying to see what was coming for them. For
Jennifer.
Something clouded the light, a dark mass, the
shadow of a god reaching out toward them. The air in the room stung
Sylvie’s skin, magic crawling over her body, jangling every nerve
all at once. Again, she heard that hungry, moaning grunt.
Jennifer’s ghost blazed with heat, flames rushing
outward, crawling the ceiling, the walls, the floor.
Sylvie rolled, trying to angle herself for a shot.
Took it. Hit nothing but the wall. Got another roar of
complaint.
We’re fucked. Too late to
run.
She ducked, curled tight around Wales, choked on
ovenhot atmosphere, her ears throbbing with pain as that animal
howl went on and on, too loud for human comfort, Jennifer’s shriek
mingling with it.
Heat on the back of Sylvie’s neck, a supernatural
shadow drifting over her skin, Wales a bony, quivering mass beneath
her. Jennifer’s scream cut off like someone had flipped a switch.
The heat in the room subsided.
That angry moan sounded again, close enough to
rattle her bones. And then . . . nothing. The shaking stopped; the
light blinked out; her ears rang tinnily; spots danced before her
eyes.
When she was convinced the god was gone, not merely
playing with them, she rolled off Wales. He was out, eyes sealed
shut, bruising beneath it. Yanking him through the circle hadn’t
been a good idea. But it had been the only way. Ending spells, like
starting a spell, took time that they hadn’t had.
She manhandled him onto the bed, fell back against
his side, and gaped at the room. She expected destruction. Cracked
plaster, scorch marks, the like. But there was almost nothing. The
mirror over the dresser, glimpsed between stacked-up chair legs,
had gone dark, smoked, as if it had gotten a better glance at the
intruder than she had and burned from the inside out, incapable of
reflecting it back.
A god, she thought again. And they were lucky. It
hadn’t manifested completely. Hadn’t done more than cast its shadow
on the mundane world. She spared a brief, belated thanks to the god
of Justice: When he’d walked the earth, he’d contained his godly
strength as best he could. This god didn’t care enough to do
so.
She got up on shaky legs, and something crunched
beneath her feet. Bone. She let her gaze drop, held through the
swinging dizziness that caused, and let her eyes focus slowly. A
skeletal hand. One of several.
The Hand of Glory had transformed from a withered,
yellow mass of flesh and bone to a hand stripped completely to bone
and charred black all the way through. Like Pompeii’s victims had,
when she touched the hand, it disintegrated to a crisp pile of
brittle ash.
Guess they’d finally found a way to destroy the
Hands of Glory in one swoop, Sylvie thought wryly. That could have
been useful a week ago. Now it was only a huh and a footnote in the supernatural files her
memory kept.
She kicked it aside, away, staggered into the
bathroom, ran the water cold and clear in the sink, and scrubbed at
her face and nape. She felt more human at once. Another cloth,
wetted down, still dripping, came with her back into the main room.
She slapped it across Wales’s forehead, watched him flinch with
some relief. Just out, then. Not
dead.
She folded the comforter—scratchy, floral
polyester—around him, cocooning him. He muttered, ducked his face
into it, and dislodged the washcloth. He flailed a spastic hand in
complaint as water ran down his neck and spine, then gave up,
passing out or falling asleep. One or the other.
Sylvie dug her bullet out of the wall where it had
lodged, dumped the misshapen thing into her pocket. That was the
final straw as far as her own energy levels went. She staggered
over to the other bed, face planted in the abused pillow, and was
out before she could do more than wonder if housekeeping would wake
them in the morning.

SHE WOKE TO HER PHONE RINGING SHRILLY, TO WALES’S
GROANING something that might be Make it
stop, to fading dreams of someone growling in her ear, and to a
body gone stiff and sore. Bastard, she thought. She hoped the
gunman’s wound got infected. She’d ill-wish their godly visitor,
too, if she had a name to fling her curses toward.
Fumbling an arm across the stretch of clean sheets
brought the phone to her hand. She flipped it open, “What?”
“You didn’t call me back,” Lio said.
“Your guard-dog wife hung up on me,” Sylvie said. A
moment later, she put her face in her pillow and groaned. She’d
intended to talk to Lio, but after she’d inhaled enough caffeine to
be reasonably civil, at least to the point of not insulting the
man’s wife.
Lio was silent for an angry second, then sighed.
“Did you find anything?” He sounded good. Lucid. Impatient. Cop on
the mend.
“Found everything,” Sylvie said. She sat up in the
bed, shoved her hair out of her face. “It’s complicated.”
“Magic?”
“Yeah,” she said. “Good news, bad news? Good news
is the women aren’t actually dead—well, except for the one who
burned up—Jennifer Costas was her name, by the way.
“The rest are in mortal danger, but alive. At least
if I don’t screw around too much. They’re kind of on a time limit.
More good news? I found them again. Bad news? I left them there,
and you can’t send anyone out to move them. They have to stay
missing until we fix this.”
“What?” All the irritation he’d suppressed earlier
came out in one sharp bark. “You what?”
“Look, Lio, I don’t like it either. But right now,
I don’t have a choice. I could tell you where the women are, but
that would just lead to a repeat of what put you in the
hospital.”
They argued for a few minutes longer, repeating the
same material—How could she? This was why he
didn’t like private investigators. This was why she didn’t like
cops. They didn’t understand the risks—until Wales shut her up
by hurling a pillow into her face and slinking into the bathroom.
“Make coffee,” he snapped, and slammed the door.
Guess he wasn’t suffering too much damage from
spell shock, then, if he was lucid, irritable, and hogging the
shower.
“Look, Lio,” Sylvie said. “I do have some info you
can work on, even from home. I took pictures. If you can match them
up with missing people . . . No, I’m not telling you how to do your
job.” She tugged at her hair in increasing frustration and finally
hung up. They were never going to be easy allies, but dammit, she
needed him to keep the cops occupied, to distract the ISI.
She threw the phone down on the bed, fisted her
hands in the sheets. It just pissed her off. A government agency
designed to deal with the supernatural, and they were so bad at it
that she couldn’t just tell them where the women were and trust to
them to fix the problem. A government agency that was so bad it
didn’t even realize how fucked-up it was. They’d poke, and pry, and
drag out some low-level witch or psychic who’d preach caution. Then
they’d ignore him or her and bull on ahead.
She heard clattering and chatter in the
hallways—the maids talking about the shaking last night, talking
about crazy guests, and Sylvie took it as a sign. She might not be
ready for the day, but it was more than ready for her.
First up, the office and faxing the pics to Lio. He
might be pissed at her, but he was homebound, bored, and far too
decent a cop to let the information go just because it came from
her; he’d look into it.
Wales stumbled out of the bathroom, towel slung
around narrow hips and looking like he’d been on a three-week
bender. Dripping, he started coffee, leaned over the pot as if
caffeine steam was a panacea for what ailed him.
“So what the hell happened?” he asked. He frowned
at the charcoal splotches on the carpet, all that was left of the
Hands. “Last thing I recall, you were dragging me out midspell. You
do like to live dangerously.”
She made grabby fingers at the mug of coffee he
poured, and with a growl, he handed it over. “So . . .”
“So, next time listen to me when I say stop the
spell,” Sylvie said. “Then you won’t get a magical concussion. Did
you get anything more out of the conversation with Jennifer than I
did? ’Cause I heard mostly gibberish. Before she got yanked away.”
He looked like he was going to demand more answers, answers she
wasn’t ready to give yet. Talking about gods before breakfast was
just . . . inhumane. She took a deliberate sip of coffee, mmmed
happily though the coffee didn’t deserve it.
As an early-morning distraction, it worked.
Wales followed her second sip with a hooded, hungry
gaze, then poured himself a cup. “I was closer to her, got some of
her memories relayed up close and personal.”
“Ugh,” Sylvie said. “Glad I missed that. Get
anything useful to go with the horror show?”
“Yeah,” he said. As usual, he qualified his first
positive response. “Maybe. I might be able to peel back at least
one layer of the spell.”
“Break the stasis? Kill the spell like you
suggested?”
He shook his head. “After losing the Hands? Best I
can do is buy the women some time, weaken whatever’s draining
them.”
“That’s not nothing,” she said. “You going to be up
to a trip to the ’Glades?” Sylvie asked. It wasn’t quite the
question she meant. She meant was he up to trying another tricky
life-endangering series of spells after the magical backlash he’d
suffered last night.
He poured a second cup of coffee, killing the pot,
and said, after a long, scalding swallow, “Reckon I’ll find
out.”